Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Gujrathi downs Nakamura, Gukesh beats Pragg in Rd 2

India’s Vidit Gujrathi upstaged world No.3 while Gukesh, 17, won the battle of teenagers in Toronto

- Press Trust of India sportsdesk@hindustant­imes.com

TORONTO: Indian Grandmaste­r Vidit Gujrathi crashed through the defences of world number three Hikaru Nakamura of United States, while R Praggnanan­dhaa went down to compatriot D Gukesh in the second round of Candidates chess tournament here.

After four draws in the first round, all the four games in the second round ended decisively on Saturday.

Top seed American Fabiano Caruana was impressive in cruising past Nijat Abasov of Azerbaijan and Russian Ian Nepomniach­tchi outfoxed Firouza Alireza of France.

In the women’s section, R Vaishali went down fighting against Zhongyi Tan of China, while Russian Aleksandra Goryachkin­a proved superior than Ukrainian Anna Muzychuk.

In the other games in this section, Koneru Humpy played out a draw with Kateryna Lagno of Russia and Nurgyul Salimova signed peace with Tinjie Lei of China.

Gujrathi along with Caruana, Nepomniach­tchi and Gukesh emerged as the early co-leaders of the event with 1.5 points apiece while Nakamura, Praggnanan­dhaa, Abasov and Alireza share the fifth spot on half a point each.

In the women’s section, Tan remained in sole lead with her second victory on the trot and Goryachkin­a was right behind her just half a point adrift.

Salimova, Humpy and Lagno share the third spot with one point in their bags and Lei, Vaishali and Muzychuk share the sixth spot with half a point to their credit.

A total of 12 rounds still remain in the biggest competitio­n of the year that will decide the challenger­s for the next world championsh­ips matches.

For the second day running, Gujrathi stole the show. It is clear that the Indian has gotten past his last below-par performanc­e in the Prague masters.

The Opening choice was a Berlin by Vidit who played his second black in a row. Nakamura was facing a finely crafted new idea as early as on move eight and the American was on his own. It was just three moves later that Gujrathi stunned his opponent with a Bishop sacrifice.

Accepting the sacrifice was the best way but Nakamura declined it and his position worsened slowly but surely. Vidit launched a king side attack soon and wrapped the issue in just 29 moves for a remarkable triumph.

Gujrathi’s dominance was certified by Nakamura, who was the first to say “good game” to the Indian.Asked about summing up the game, the Indian said that it was a day when everything worked for him.”

Your prep comes in, he makes a mistake and you get a brilliant attack, cant add much to it,” he said.

Praggnanan­dhaa’s Catalan opening yielded a decent yet extremely complex position in the opening. Gukesh, black, had to find things on the board and once he steered the game in to unchartere­d waters Praggnanan­dhaa was the first to err.

Gukesh could have been on top if he could find the best machine-like moves. However that did not happen and it was a wild position on board wherein Praggnanan­dhaa blundered amidst tactical complicati­ons. The game lasted 33 moves.

Caruana opened with the Rossolimo variation against Abasov’s Sicilian defense. The American got a tangible advantage in the middle game after a dubious pawn sacrifice by Abasov and technical part was handled quite well by the American.

Nepomniach­tchi also faced the Berlin defense and parted with a pawn early in the middle game. While the compensati­on remained it was never clear till Alireza failed to find the best continuati­on in the middle game. The Russian, who is playing under the FIDE flag, pounced on his chances and scored his first victory.

In the women’s section, Vaishali was outdone by a not-soregular queen pawn opening. Playing black, the Indian equalized quite easily trading off both Bishops early and slow manoeuvrin­g ensued by both players wherein the Chinese was going after the black king.

 ?? FIDE/FLICK ?? D Gukesh beat compatriot R Praggnanan­dhaa in Round 2 of the Candidates chess tournament in Toronto on Friday.
FIDE/FLICK D Gukesh beat compatriot R Praggnanan­dhaa in Round 2 of the Candidates chess tournament in Toronto on Friday.

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